Insurance companies paid out over €220 million in compensation claims related to December's arctic weather conditions.
Irish insurers dealt with almost 30,000 claims relating
to damage to homes and businesses due to burst pipes, according to
the Irish Insurance Federation.
Household claims cost €173.1 million, while commercial claims
amounted to €50.6 million. The worst affected counties were Cork
(€32.4 million), Galway (€24.7 million) and Dublin (€20.2
million)
The adverse weather conditions experienced across the country in
December represented the third severe weather event to affect the
country during a fourteen-month period, the IIF said.
IIF chief executive Mike Kemp said the quick response from insurers
helped many homeowners and businesses in getting back on their feet
as fast as possible.
"Severe weather events such as these have been very rare events in
the past in Ireland. To have had the three largest weather-related
losses in our history in such close succession has put pressure on
the market, but insurers have repeatedly displayed their resilience
and as a result have injected three-quarters of a billion euro back
into the Irish economy in a 14-month period," he said.
The IIF is urging people to review their home and business
situations in advance of next winter by taking precautions such as
ensuring tanks in the attic are properly lagged and that exposed
pipes are insulated.